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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim McMannis who wrote (269734)1/23/2006 3:54:19 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1576663
 
RE:"If we don't reverse it soon, we will gradually diminish the male identity, and thus the productivity and the mission, of the next generation of young men, and all the ones that follow."

Men have been castrated on a lot of fronts.


First of all, its not men were talking about........its the current crop of boys and the ones before them..........Z's generation.

And its not castration. Most women don't understand boys, and unlike past generations, are not willing to find out what is the best way to reach them. They are not castrating boys..........they simply want them to learn like the girls do.......but boys don't learn that way.

It wasn't so bad when boys had father figures at home but that's changed too. Kids, esp. boys, learn by modeling. If there are not father figures in their lives and no male teachers or male role models, they have very few clues on how to be.

"Most schools are girl-friendly, says Michael Gurian, coauthor with Kathy Stevens of a new book,"The Minds of Boys: Saving Our Sons from Falling Behind in School and Life," "because teachers, who are mostly women, teach the way they learn." Seventy percent of children diagnosed with learning disabilities are male, and the sheer number of boys who struggle in school is staggering. Eighty percent of high-school drop-outs are boys and less than 45 percent of students enrolled in college are young men. To close the educational gender gap, Gurian says, teachers need to change their techniques. They should light classrooms more brightly for boys and speak to them loudly, since research shows males don't see or hear as well as females. Because boys are more-visual learners, teachers should illustrate a story before writing it and use an overhead projector to practice reading and writing. Gurian's ideas seem to be catching on. More than 185 public schools now offer some form of single-sex education, and Gurian has trained more than 15,000 teachers through his institute in Colorado Springs."

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